DAYS 1-5 (JANUARY 11-15)
High pressure brings fair weather to the region today with an “easy chill”, a cool day, above the average, and not much wind. Things still look much the same for our upcoming unsettled weather passing through. We cloud up and have spotty light rain and snow around on Thursday (snow most likely away from the coast, but light!), although some of the rain that falls may freeze on surfaces with temperatures just cold enough, as warm air tries to move in both surface and aloft ahead of low pressure. This low ultimately takes a track to our northwest and when we get into the warm sector is when we see our heaviest rainfall, Thursday night / early Friday morning, which may even include some thunder, but timing is fast enough that the cold front from the low sweeps through and offshore, so that most of Friday is rain-free, just windy and cool with breaking clouds. Additional low pressure evolves on the offshore front as it slows down as we get into the weekend, far enough to our east so that we see fair weather, but close enough so we feel a chilly northerly breeze from it, in combination with high pressure to our west at that time.
TODAY: Sun/cloud mix. Highs 37-44. Wind N up to 10 MPH.
TONIGHT: Mostly cloudy. Lows 28-35. Wind NE up to 10 MPH.
THURSDAY: Cloudy. Spotty light rain, freezing rain, and snow especially afternoon. Highs 36-43. Wind E up to 10 MPH.
THURSDAY NIGHT: Cloudy. Periods of rain including embedded heavier showers with the chance of thunder. Areas of fog developing. Temperatures rising through the 40s. Wind SE 5-15 MPH, gusts 20-25 MPH, strongest coast where gusts above 30 MPH are possible.
FRIDAY: A cloudy start with showers ending, then lots of clouds but breaks of sun. Highs 48-55. Wind SW 10-20 MPH with higher gusts, shifting to W.
FRIDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy. Lows 28-35. Wind NW 10-20 MPH, higher gusts in the evening, shifting to N.
SATURDAY: Sun/cloud mix. Highs 35-42. Wind N 10-20 MPH.
SATURDAY NIGHT: Partly cloudy. Lows 22-29. Wind N 10-20 MPH.
SUNDAY: Mostly sunny. Highs 33-40. Wind N 10-20 MPH.
DAYS 6-10 (JANUARY 16-20)
High pressure nudges east for a dry, more tranquil, chilly MLK Jr. Day. Frontal system from the west brings unsettled weather but maybe more clouds than precipitation for January 17 as it will be running into a non-supporting roadblock in the atmosphere. Chilly, dry weather follows this but as the flow in the atmosphere quickens it may be unsettled again by the end of the period with a rain/mix/snow threat.
DAYS 11-15 (JANUARY 21-25)
This looks like a drier period that trends somewhat cooler to colder as we lose the Pacific flow and gradually re-introduce Canadian air to our region. Not sure yet if one more Pacific system will try to move through during transition, otherwise watch for a weaker low out of Canada with a minor precipitation threat around mid period.